For the agile Corgi--whether it's to rein in that rambunctious energy, hone in that intelligence, or just to have something to do--it's AGILITY!
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Latest Activity: Jan 4, 2016
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I don't know a lot but it seems to me that if you teach your dog to sniff things in-between obstacles that they are going to want to do that in competition. I would make sniffing work a separate activity from agility.
Sherman will get distracted at class and go off to sniff but it is usually because I am learning to slow and he gets bored of me. If I can keep him running the whole time he is focused, but if I stop and want to redo an obstacle he will lose interest after a few times.
I don't have Bella in Agility but what I found is the reward must be great to get them to do what you want them too. I found that Natural Balance Lamb roll worked the best. I used it only for training and once I found this, she would do anything I asked her to without delay. You might try leave it and practice alot during class.
Sniffing, sniffing, oh the sniffing! Jack is a terrible sniffer at agility, and the little stinker knows exactly when I can and can't catch him. Any tips to stop sniffing? He has a great recall; we hike off-leash fairly regularly, he comes back to me all the time. I've even called him off something he was about to roll in. But at agility... well, not so much. I just had him out working in the yard on the long line. I scattered treats around the ground, let him wander to find them, and called him back to me multiple times. He came back lickity-split, ears up, big smile. In fact, I had trouble shooshing him away so we could practice, his focus was so good.
Problem is, in the ring he knows he might a) find treats and b) he does not know til he finds them what they might be! It's like Christmas!
Sniffing is his favorite thing in the world. He's rather sniff than play with other dogs. A frisbee or chuck-it tennis ball beats sniffing for about five throws til he wears off his excitement, and then back to sniffing. So how to break him of something that is intrinsically so rewarding to him? Last class, my instructor took him and held him in "time out" while I went to another part of the ring and ignored him. That did seem to help a bit.
I'm using a clicker and really good treats (cheese) at class and so far not much success. He's worse when it's hot and we're moving slow, so I don't think it's stress-sniffing. I think it's boredom sniffing.
Hey Cheri, what does it mean when you say you do layering in your handling? I need to learn all the cool agility terms.
As for contacts, I like running contacts because we want to be fast! No stopping or slowing down :)
I trained my older Cardigan with a 2on2off on both the dogwalk and the frame. A few years ago I stopped asking her for it on the frame but have kept it on the dogwalk. I found that because she came down the frame with her head up it was causing her should problems from the impact. Changing it to just a quick release has gotten rid of a lot of soreness after a trial.
My young cardi is the same- a 2on2off on the dogwalk, and a running frame.
Running contacts are much more difficult to teach than a stop because it is less clear to the dog what is expected of them. It really comes down to preference and the individual dog I think.
Good luck with whatever you decide!
Hi all!
On height -
Philip runs 8" in AKC and 12" in USDAA. It doesn't seem to make a difference in difficulty for him at all, but he's on the larger side for a Pem and still young.
We actually started off with 12" in both (I've even posted here about it before), but he got lucky and got measured down to 8" in AKC when official measurements went through at 2 years old. They put him at 11" exactly. All of his USDAA measurements have been 11.5-12" at withers, but hey - I'm not complaining.
He does tend to knock bars at 12" a little more, but I think that's just because he isn't used to it, he has no trouble clearing the jumps for the most part. In class, he's even jumped a 20" double once while I wasn't watching!
On contacts -
I trained Philip in 2-on-2-off, and he can easily do it in class, however he's a brat so he chooses to run off in competition, sometimes even missing the contact on the Dog Walk. If you ask me, I think getting into 2o2o is much safer than leaping over the contact all together, but I can't get him to stop in competition - he just knows that he can rebel, and so he does.
I've seen lots of dogs do running contacts just fine, and others that do 2o2o or a down. I think it's whatever works for you and your dog. I think the stop with 2o2o or a down is very advantageous in terms of letting you get ahead or switch sides easily, especially with a fast dog like Philip, so I'm all for at least attempting to teach it.
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